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Chapter 10
Qualitative Data Analysis
Features of Qualitative Data Analysis


The focus on text—on qualitative data rather
than on numbers—is the most important feature
of qualitative analysis.
The “text” that qualitative researchers analyze
is most often transcripts of interviews or notes
from participant observation sessions, but text
can also refer to pictures or other images that
the researcher examines.
Features of Qualitative Data Analysis,
cont.



Qualitative data analysts seek to describe their
textual data in ways that capture the setting or
people who produced this text on their own
terms rather than in terms of predefined
measures and hypotheses.
What this means is that qualitative data
analysis tends to be inductive—the analyst
identifies important categories in the data.
As well as patterns and relationships, through a
process of discovery.
Features of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.



Good qualitative data analyses also are
distinguished by their focus on the interrelated
aspects of the setting or group, or person, under
investigation—the case—rather than breaking the
whole into separate parts.
The whole is always understood to be greater than
the sum of its parts, and so the social context of
events, thoughts, and actions becomes essential for
interpretation.
Within this framework, it doesn’t really make sense
to focus on two variables out of an interacting set of
influences and test the relationship between just
those two.
Features of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.



Qualitative data analysis begins as data are
being collected rather than after data collection
has ceased
Next to her field notes or interview transcripts,
the qualitative analyst jots down ideas about the
meaning of the text and how it might relate to
other issues.
This process of reading through the data and
interpreting them continues throughout the
project.
Features of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


The analyst adjusts the data collection process
itself when it begins to appear that additional
concepts need to be investigated or new
relationships explored.
Progressive focusing is the process by which
a qualitative analyst interacts with the data and
gradually refines her focus.
Features of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.

Basic guidelines for analyzing qualitative
data
o
o
o
Know yourself, your biases, and preconceptions.
Consult others and keep looking for alternative
interpretations.
Be flexible.
Features of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.
o
o
o
o
Exhaust the data. Try to account for all the data
in the texts, then publicly acknowledge the
unexplained and remember the next principle.
Celebrate anomalies. They are the windows to
insight.
Get critical feedback. The solo analyst is a great
danger to self and others.
Be explicit. Share the details with yourself, your
team members, and your audiences.
Qualitative Data Analysis as an Art


1.
This type of data analysis involves alternating
between immersion in the text to identify
meanings and editing the text to create
categories and codes.
The process involves three different modes of
reading the text:
When the researcher reads the text literally,
she is focused on its literal content and form,
so the text “leads” the dance.
Qualitative Data Analysis as an Art,
cont.
2.
3.
When the researcher reads the text reflexively, she
focuses on how her own orientation shapes her
interpretations and focus. Now, the researcher
leads the dance.
When the researcher reads the text interpretively,
she tries to construct her own interpretation of what
the text means.
Qualitative Compared to
Quantitative Data Analysis



A focus on meanings rather than on quantifiable
phenomena
Collection of many data on a few cases rather
than few data on many cases
Study in depth and detail, without
predetermined categories or directions, rather
than emphasis on analyses and categories
determined in advance
Qualitative Compared to
Quantitative Data Analysis, cont.



Sensitivity to context rather than seeking universal
generalizations
Attention to the impact of the researcher’s and
others’values on the course of the analysis
A goal of rich descriptions of the world rather than
measurement of specific variables
Qualitative Compared to
Quantitative Data Analysis, cont.



You’ll also want to keep in mind features of
qualitative data analysis that are shared with
those of quantitative data analysis.
Both qualitative and quantitative data analysis
can involve making distinctions about textual
data.
You also know that textual data can be
transposed to quantitative data through a
process of categorization and counting.
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis


Documentation. The data for a qualitative study
most often are notes jotted down in the field or
during an interview—from which the original
comments, observations, and feelings are
reconstructed—or text transcribed from
audiotapes.
Documentation is critical to qualitative research for
several reasons: It is essential for keeping track of
what will be a rapidly growing volume of notes,
tapes, and documents; it provides a way of
developing an outline for the analytic process; and
it encourages ongoing conceptualizing and
strategizing about the text.
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.



Conceptualization, Coding, and
Categorizing. Identifying and refining important
concepts is a key part of the iterative process of
qualitative research.
Sometimes, conceptualizing begins with a
simple observation that is interpreted directly,
“pulled apart,” and then put back together more
meaningfully.
A well-design chart, or matrix, can facilitate the
coding and categorization process.
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


Examining Relationships and Displaying Data.
Examining relationships is the centerpiece of the
analytic process, because it allows the researcher
to move from simple description of the people and
settings to explanations of why things happened as
they did with those people in that setting.
The process of examining relationships can be
captured in a matrix that shows how different
concepts are connected, or perhaps what causes
are linked with what effects.
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


Authenticating Conclusions. No set
standards exist for evaluating the validity or
“authenticity” of conclusions in a qualitative
study, but the need to consider carefully the
evidence and methods on which conclusions
are based is just as great as with other types
of research.
Individual items of information can be
assessed in terms of at least three criteria
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.
1.
2.
3.
How credible was the informant?
Were statements made in response to the
researcher’s questions, or were they
spontaneous?
How does the presence or absence of the
researcher or the researcher’s informant
influence the actions and statements of other
group members?
Techniques of Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


Reflexivity. Confidence in the conclusions
from a field research study is also
strengthened by an honest and informative
account about how the researcher interacted
with subjects in the field, what problems he or
she encountered, and how these problems
were or were not resolved.
Such a “natural history” of the development of
the evidence enables others to evaluate the
findings.
Alternatives in Qualitative Data
Analysis



Ethnography is the study of a culture or cultures
that a group of people share (Van Maanen
1995:4).
As a method, it usually is meant to refer to the
process of participant observation by a single
investigator who immerses himself or herself in the
group for a long period of time (often one or more
years).
Ethnographic research can also be called
“naturalistic,” because it seeks to describe and
understand the natural social world as it really is,
in all its richness and detail.
Alternatives in Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.



Netnography is the use of ethnographic methods to
study online communities. Also termed
cyberethnography and virtual ethnography.
Online communities may be formed by persons with
similar interests or backgrounds, perhaps to create new
social relationships that location or schedules did not
permit, or to supplement relationships that emerge in the
course of work or school or other ongoing social
activities.
Unlike in-person ethnographies, netnographies can
focus on communities whose members are physically
distant and dispersed.
Alternatives in Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


Ethnomethodology focuses on the way that
participants construct the social world in which they
live—how they “create reality”—rather than on
describing the social world itself.
In fact, ethnomethodologists do not necessarily
believe that we can find an objective reality; it is the
way that participants come to create and sustain a
sense of “reality” that is of interest.
Alternatives in Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.


Conversation analysis is a specific qualitative
method for analyzing the sequence and details
of conversational interaction.
Like ethnomethodology, from which it
developed, conversation analysis focuses on
how reality is constructed, rather than on what
is it.
Alternatives in Qualitative Data
Analysis, cont.



Narrative methods use interviews and sometimes
documents or observations to “follow participants
down their trails” (Riessman 2008:24).
Unlike conversation analysis, which focuses
attention on moment-by-moment interchange,
narrative analysis seeks to put together the “big
picture” about experiences or events as the
participants understand them.
Narrative analysis focuses on “the story itself” and
seeks to preserve the integrity of personal
biographies or a series of events that cannot
adequately be understood in terms of their discrete
elements (Riessman 2002:218).
Visual Sociology




For about 150 years, people have been creating a
record of the social world with photography.
This creates the possibility of “observing” the social
world through photographs and films and of interpreting
the resulting images as a “text.”
Visual sociologists and other social researchers have
been developing methods like this to learn how others
“see” the social world and to create images for further
study.
As in the analysis of written text, however, the visual
sociologist must be sensitive to the way in which a
photograph or film “constructs” the reality that it depicts.
Combining Qualitative Methods

Qualitative researchers often combine one or
more of these methods in order to take
advantage of different opportunities for data
collection and to enrich understanding of social
processes.
Combining Qualitative and
Quantitative Methods

Conducting qualitative interviews can often
enhance a research design that uses primarily
quantitative measurement techniques.
Computer-Assisted Qualitative
Data Analysis


The analysis process can be enhanced in
various ways by using a computer.
Programs designed for qualitative data can
speed up the analysis process, make it easier
for researchers to experiment with different
codes, test different hypotheses about
relationships, and facilitate diagrams of
emerging theories and preparation of research
reports
Computer-Assisted Qualitative
Data Analysis, cont.


The steps involved parallel those used
traditionally to analyze such text as notes,
documents, or interview transcripts:
preparation, coding, analysis, and reporting.
Three of the most popular programs to illustrate
these steps: HyperRESEARCH, QSR Nvivo,
and ATLAS.ti.
Ethics in Qualitative Data Analysis



The qualitative data analyst is never far from
ethical issues and dilemmas.
Throughout the analytic process, the analyst
must consider how the findings will be used and
how participants in the setting will react.
Miles and Huberman (1994:293–295) suggest
several specific questions that are of particular
importance during the process of data analysis:
Ethics in Qualitative Data Analysis,
cont.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Privacy, confidentiality, and
anonymity.
Intervention and advocacy.
Research integrity and quality.
Ownership of data and conclusions.
Use and misuse of results.
Conclusions


The variety of approaches to qualitative data
analysis makes it difficult to provide a
consistent set of criteria for interpreting their
quality.
Denzin (2002:362–363) suggests that at the
conclusion of their analyses, qualitative data
analysts ask the following questions about the
materials they have produced:
Conclusions, cont.
1.
2.
3.
Do they illuminate the phenomenon as lived
experience? In other words, do the materials
bring the setting alive in terms of the people in that
setting?
Are they based on thickly contextualized
materials? We should expect thick descriptions
that encompass the social setting studied.
Are they historically and relationally
grounded? There must be a sense of the
passage of time between events and the presence
of relationships between social actors.
Conclusions, cont.
4.
5.

Are they processual and interactional? The
researcher must have described the research
process and his or her interactions within the
setting.
Do they engulf what is known about the
phenomenon? This includes situating the analysis
in the context of prior research and also
acknowledging the researcher’s own orientation
upon first starting the investigation.
When an analysis of qualitative data is judged as
successful in terms of these criteria, we can
conclude that the goal of “authenticity” has been
achieved.
Conclusions, cont.

As a research methodologist, you must be
ready to use both types of techniques, evaluate
research findings in terms of both sets of
criteria, and mix and match the methods as
required by the research problem to be
investigated and the setting in which it is to be
studied.